“Gracias,” Quinn murmured as Gabriel seated himself beside her. Now she had to figure out how to speak with him in private.
“The cake is almost as good as Marta’s French toast,” he said, a seductively intimate hint of laughter in his voice as he mentioned the shared memory.
“Nothing could be that good,” Quinn said, picking up her fork and cutting off a small bite. She didn’t think she’d be able to enjoy the dessert with both Don Lorenzo and Gabriel watching her, but the flavor was incredible—sweet, creamy, but with a lightness to the cake that was extraordinary, given all the milk that saturated it. “This is amazing.” She poked at a deep purple flower with the tine of her fork. “It’s almost too pretty to eat, though.”
Gabriel nodded at his own plate, which was empty of all but flowers and a small swirl of the creamy sauce. “If you leave even a bite, Marta will hunt me down and ask what was wrong with it. Or with you.” Gabriel winked.
A little of Quinn’s nervousness eased. She cut off a larger bite. “I don’t want to subject you to that.”
“I prefer the crema de Caleva,” Don Lorenzo said. “It’s our own native tradition.”
Quinn had tasted it and thought it wasn’t much different from crème brûlée, but she wasn’t going to argue with Gabriel’s father, especially when Gabriel’s expression went from playful to exasperated.
“Quinn, how did you like training with Esmé?” Raul’s question came from diagonally across the table. “She’s pretty tough.”
“My arm muscles are still complaining,” Quinn said. “And now Mikel has signed me up for a self-defense course, which he guarantees will give me bruises. I’m supposed to be a computer nerd, not a ninja.”
Raul laughed.
Gabriel did not. Instead, he spoke in a low voice. “Is Mikel concerned that you’re in danger because of your work on the kidnapping?”
He never referred to it as my kidnapping.
“Not specifically, no.” Gabriel didn’t need to know that the kidnapping was all she worked on. “You know Mikel. He’s professionally paranoid. It’s his job.”
“I suppose.” Gabriel did not sound satisfied.
“So you’re a computer expert?” Don Lorenzo asked Quinn.
“I’m more of an expert at searching for information via computer. I’m not a computer scientist or anything like that,” Quinn answered, trying to gauge whether he was being polite or was interested.
“We are in the midst of scanning historical Calevan documents into the computer so they will reside in the cloud,” Don Lorenzo said, enunciating the technical terms carefully, as though he were speaking an unfamiliar language. “I suppose that would be useful to someone like you.”
“If it were indexed thoroughly, it would be,” Quinn agreed.
Don Lorenzo shook his head. “I understand that is necessary, but you don’t have the sense of history or discovery if you find it in an index. It is a shame to take that experience away.”
“I understand what you mean. I get a thrill when I find a useful bit of information in my electronic searching.”
“Ah, but my method is very different from yours,” he said with a faint smile. “I rummage through dust-covered wooden chests and climb to the highest untouched bookshelves of ancient libraries. It is a treasure hunt.”
On her right, Gabriel snorted. She considered kicking his ankle but decided you didn’t do that to a duke at the king’s dinner table. Then he surprised her by leaning forward slightly so he could address his father. “Have you discovered any new documents in the last couple of months that might relate to ownership of the lily fields?”
A look of surprised pleasure flitted across Don Lorenzo’s face. “I don’t recall any of significance, but I will consult my records to be sure. Why do you ask?”
“I’m helping Uncle Luis and Raul with a political situation that involves the lily fields. There’s some vague claim that a new document has been found to shed doubt on the crown’s contract.”
His father’s eyes blazed with pride. “I am pleased to hear that you are taking up your duties as a royal duke.”
Gabriel’s breath hissed in, and Quinn looked around to find his lips curled in a derisive smile. “I’m just the front man to keep some annoying nobles from bothering anyone important. Not to mention that I’m playing the guitar again, so I won’t have much time for other duties.”
“You’re playing again?” Don Lorenzo sounded as though he could barely get the words out. Was he relieved or concerned? Quinn couldn’t tell. “Hijo mío, I am—”
“I’m sorry to end this delightful evening, but I must retire,” la marquise's crystalline voice cut through all conversation.
The table rose as one, except for Quinn, who was unprepared and scrambled to her feet a few seconds late. The king and la marquise exchanged the standard double-cheek air-kiss, and Camille followed her godmother from the dining room.
“Let’s get out of here,” Gabriel whispered in her ear as he seized her hand. “Father, please excuse us.” He led her to the king. “Tío, it was a pleasure.”